Our Services

Occupational Therapy

Pediatric occupational therapists work to promote processing skills (modulation and regulation), self-help skills (dressing and eating), fine motor skills (handwriting and hand use), and attention skills. If your child exhibits these behaviors he or she may benefit from occupational therapy:

Frequent emotional breakdowns

Decreased frustration tolerance

Difficulty coordinating body movements

Trouble with handwriting or other school related tasks

Difficulty with tolerating touch

Limited attention to tasks

Physical Therapy

Pediatric Physical Therapists work with infants to young adults, providing strengthening programs to meet their functional goals. They individualize therapy programs for each child and family. These programs may:

Improve flexibility and strength

Decrease pain

Improve balance and coordination

Improve movement through functional positions

Improve ability to achieve developmental milestones such as crawling and walking

Improve circulation around an injury through the use of modalities

Instruct patients how to avoid injury

Improve safety

Lower the risk of injury

If your child exhibits these behaviors he or she MAY benefit from physical therapy:

Poor balance

Muscle weakness

Limitations in range of motion

Tendency to only look in one direction

Trouble running, jumping, and/or climbing

Speech/Language Therapy

Pediatric speech therapists work on oral-motor skills (feeding, swallowing, and sound production) social interactions, and language development (comprehension and expression).

If your child exhibits these behaviors, he or she MAY benefit from speech/language therapy:

Difficulty with bottle feeding or transitioning to purees/table foods

Doesn't produce sounds or is producing only single words by 18 months

Difficulty with sounds productions or not being able to be understood by others